"If the only thing you change is the number of magnet poles, then the only real change you will see is a doubling of the Hertz frequency. The alternating current will change directions at a faster rate."
It would double the cycle, as well as cut the out of field copper in half by narrowing the windings. I'm curious if the reduction in resistance in the circuit would gain anything.
"As shown, portions of 3 magnets will be under one single coil at times during the rotation. This will cause cancellation, and the coil will not produce anything (except heat) when this occurs."
The pic is a bit busy.... but it is nothing less than the usual 3 phase used on many machines, with a doubling of the poles. Only 2 poles under a coil at a time. I don't see that any cancellation would occur. You still end up with a N under one leg and a S under another. The difference would be doubling the pole reversal, and reducing the resistance of the out of field windings. Not sure if there would be any gain by doing so. Just wondering.
As of yet, I haven't built anything. I am just throwing ideas out. I know the principles (at least some of them) on which this works. I am just toying with ideas before I start making actual parts.
I am brainstorming for a machine with a max of 8 ft prop. I would like to get as much out of it as possible. I am willing to try something new if the general consensus is that it would be worth the effort. Unless I throw the ideas out here, I'll never know. I can model anything on screen, but I don't have the real world experience. My thought was that resistance reduces output considerably, and if the coils are narrowed it will reduce resistance possibly resulting in a more efficient alt.
Don't take this as a slam... I am coming from a good background with little experience in power generation. I'm still taking stabs. Might come up with the "next revelation" or might build Hugh's 4 footer. Time will tell.
Copper plate is ruled out from the start.... But what about ribbon? Take a .375 X .01 copper ribbon... wind it into a coil.... what benefits would there be? What drawbacks? I've seen the square winding wire - provides an almost solid coil.... What if ribbon was used to wind? No eddy's. Thickness maintained from the start. maximum amount of copper in the alotted space.
I always question why. Sometimes it leads to something. Sometimes it puts me in my place.